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Low Seroprevalence of Lyme Disease Among Multiple Sclerosis Patients in New Brunswick

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2020

Gregg MacLean
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Horizon Health, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Peggy Cook
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Horizon Health, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada
L. Robbin Lindsay
Affiliation:
Zoonotic Diseases and Special Pathogens Division, National Microbiology Laboratory (NML), Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Todd F. Hatchette
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Nova Scotia Health Authority (NSHA), Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Duncan Webster*
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Horizon Health, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
*
Correspondence to: Duncan Webster, MA, MD, FRCPC, Division of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Saint John Regional Hospital, Saint John, New Brunswick, CanadaE2L 4L2. Email: duncan.webster@horizonnb.ca
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Abstract:

The signs and symptoms of Lyme neuroborreliosis can overlap with non-infectious degenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS). In this study, we assessed a cohort of MS patients in Atlantic Canada for serological evidence of Lyme disease (LD). No positive serology was identified using the recommended two-tiered algorithm.

Résumé :

RÉSUMÉ :

Faible séroprévalence de la maladie de Lyme parmi des patients du Nouveau-Brunswick atteints de sclérose en plaques. Les signes et les symptômes neurologiques associés à la maladie de Lyme (neuroborréliose) peuvent recouper ceux de maladies dégénératives non-infectieuses comme la sclérose en plaques (SP). Dans cette étude, nous avons fait l’évaluation d’une cohorte de patients du Canada atlantique atteints de SP afin d’obtenir des preuves sérologiques de la maladie de Lyme. De façon générale, aucune sérologie positive n’a été identifiée au moyen d’un algorithme à deux niveaux (two-tiered algorithm) recommandé.

Type
Brief Communications
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Inc.

Lyme disease (LD) is a zoonotic infection caused by bacteria belonging to the Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato complex (Bb), which is transmitted to humans by infected Ixodes ticks. If the infection is not treated, the bacteria can disseminate leading to other manifestations such as arthritis and carditis, as well as neurologic disease called Lyme neuroborreliosis (LNB). The signs and symptoms of LNB are variable and can affect both the central and peripheral nervous systems. Reference Koedel, Fingerle and Pfister1 Regional differences in the presentation of LNB have been noted and are likely due to variations in B. burgdorferi genospecies. LNB is more commonly identified in Europe and associated with painful radiculitis and chronic progressive spastic paraparesis. In North America, cranial neuropathy or aseptic meningitis are the main manifestations of LNB cases. Reference Koedel, Fingerle and Pfister1 The symptoms of LNB can overlap with other non-infectious degenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), Parkinson’s disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Furthermore, there are data to suggest that patients with LNB may present with MRI findings in the CNS; Reference Agarwal and Sze2,Reference Lindland, Solheim and Andreassen3 however, these radiologic findings are non-specific, and similar lesions can be found in other demyelinating diseases and also in normal controls. Reference Agarwal and Sze2 Given that the Atlantic provinces have the highest rates of MS in Canada, and have increasing rates of Lyme disease, 4,Reference Gilmour, Ramage-Morin and Wong5 in this study, we assessed a cohort of patients known to have MS and living in the Atlantic Canadian province of New Brunswick, for serological evidence of Lyme disease.

Participants were recruited from the MS Clinic in Saint John, New Brunswick, between June 16 and July 22, 2014, at the time of scheduled clinic appointments. To avoid selection bias, all clinical patients were approached to enroll in the study until the target sample size was met. All participants had been diagnosed with MS by a neurologist, based on neurologic findings, new lesions on MRI demonstrated over time, and in some cases, positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) banding, in accordance with the McDonald criteria or the older Barkhoff’s criteria. Reference Thompson, Banwell and Barkhof6 Once informed consent was obtained, patient sera, demographic information, MS type and history, tick exposure history, and employment information were collected. The presence of Bb antibodies in each participant’s sera was determined using the two-tiered algorithm in accordance with the CDC guidelines. Briefly, sera were tested with the C6 B. burgdorferi ELISA (Immunetics, Inc., Boston, Massachusetts, USA) as per the manufacturer’s recommendations. Positive (antibody index ≥ 1.10) and equivocal (antibody index 0.91–1.09) specimens subsequently underwent IgG Western blot (WB) testing (B. burgdorferi US (IgG), Euroimmun, Luebeck, Germany). Samples were considered positive based on the CDC interpretive criteria which require 5 of 10 bands of sufficient intensity were present on the IgG Western blots. Reference Wormser, Dattwyler and Shapiro7 The seroprevalence of Bb antibodies in the MS patient cohort was compared to a group of 74 healthy individuals with no neurologic conditions recruited from within New Brunswick. The controls were recruited through a Mount Allison University (MAU) study and were geographically matched, though not matched for age or gender.

In this study, the first-tier EIA testing using the C6 EIA was performed in two separate labs: the clinical laboratory responsible for LD testing in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (QEII Microbiology Laboratory, Nova Scotia Health Authority (NSHA), Halifax, Nova Scotia), and a research laboratory at MAU in Sackville, New Brunswick. Positive EIAs identified at the NSHA underwent confirmatory WB testing at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The MAU research lab also performed WB testing on study specimens (MarDX B. burgdorferi IgG Marblot Western Blot). Continuous data were analyzed using the t test.

Ninety patients with MS participated in the study. Most were female (66/90) with a mean age of 51 years (+/− 12 yrs.) and 30 (33%) were receiving immunomodulatory therapy consisting of natalizumab, fingolimod, dimethyl fumarate, or teriflunomide. All participants were from southern New Brunswick which has the highest number of LD cases in the province. Reference Gilmour, Ramage-Morin and Wong5 Twenty-one of 90 (23.3%) study participants described prior tick exposure. Only 7/90 (7.8%) MS patients had a reactive or equivocal C6 EIA. Overall, there was no difference between the average C6 EIA index values obtained at the two laboratories (0.46 vs 0.42 for NSHA and MAU, respectively; p=.09). In addition, at both labs, the average C6 EIA index was significantly lower when comparing patients that were on immunosuppression to those that were not (0.26 vs 0.56, p < 0.001, and 0.33 vs 0.47, p=.045 for NSHA and MAU laboratories, respectively). All confirmatory IgG WBs were negative based on CDC criteria. Of the seven reactive or equivocal C6 EIA specimens, five had a single reactive band, one had two bands and one did not have any reactive bands on the IgG WB (Table 1).

Table 1: Description of the Western blot banding patterns associated with positive and equivocal C6 EIA specimens with testing at the clinical and research laboratories

EIA – enzyme immunoassay; NSHA – Nova Scotia Health Authority clinical laboratory; MAU – Mount Allison University research laboratory; NML – National Microbiology Laboratory.

*Bands are not considered in the CDC interpretive criteria.

In the healthy control population, only 1/74 had a positive C6 EIA at both CDHA and MAU labs. The IgG WB result was negative (only 2/10 bands were present) for this control specimen at both labs. Testing of controls at the MAU research lab also noted two other specimens that were positive by EIA. These two specimens were negative at the clinical laboratory at NSHA, however, and also negative by IgG WB testing at the NML (3/10 bands and 1/10 bands).

In this study, none of the MS patients or healthy controls had positive LD serology using the recommended two-tiered algorithm. Reference Wormser, Dattwyler and Shapiro7 Although there were reactive or equivocal C6 EIAs in the MS cohort, the use of the C6 EIA alone is not recommended because it has a lower specificity than the two-tiered algorithm leading to falsely reactive results. When these specimens were tested using a commercially available IgG WB, 6/7 had one or two bands on the IgG WB. The most common was p41 which is known to have poor specificity as antibodies to other bacteria can cross react with this protein. Reference Ogden, Arsenault, Hatchette, Mechai and Lindsay8

There have been a number of studies in the US and Europe that have looked at the seroprevalence of Bb antibodies in MS patients. A study in New York showed that only 1/89 patients from Long Island with a definite diagnosis of MS had a positive Bb EIA (using a whole-cell sonicate) which was felt to be secondary to prior exposure to Lyme disease in an endemic region. Reference Coyle9 Similarly, a study in Austria found that there was no difference in the seroprevalence in 106 MS patients compared to 13 matched controls. Reference Schmutzhard, Pohl and Stanek10 There are other data, however, that have found higher seroprevalence in MS patients compared to controls or other neurologic disease. Reference Chmielewska-Badora, Cisak and Dutkiewicz11,Reference di Bella, Calisto and Calimeri12 However, these studies did not use the two-tiered algorithm. One study used IFA Reference di Bella, Calisto and Calimeri12 which is not commonly used for Lyme serology and the other studies used only EIA based on the whole-cell sonicate of Bb. Reference Coyle9Reference Chmielewska-Badora, Cisak and Dutkiewicz11 None of the studies tested their reactive samples with WB. These are significant limitations as the whole-cell Bb EIA is known to have poor specificity ranging from 86.3% to 96.1%. Reference Waddell, Greig, Mascarenhas, Harding, Lindsay and Ogden13

In another study from a highly endemic LD area in Norway, 12/179 (7%) MS patients had Bb antibodies detected in serum which was much lower than 18% identified in blood donors. Of these MS patients with positive serology in blood, none had antibodies in their CSF. Reference Vatne, Mygland and Ljøstad14 The documentation of intrathecal antibody production using an antibody index (AI) has a sensitivity approaching 100% when patients have had symptoms longer than 8 weeks. Reference Dessau, van Dam and Fingerle15 The authors do not describe whether the serologic results in blood were from EIA alone or using the two-tiered algorithm. However, even if the seroprevalence was determined using the appropriate two-tiered testing, given the lack of intrathecal antibodies, and, therefore, a negative AI, it is unlikely that the MS patients with antibodies in their serum had LNB, rather the positive serology likely reflects previous exposure to Bb while living in a highly endemic LD area.

One-third of patients in this study were on immunomodulatory agents including natalizumab, fingolimod, dimethyl fumarate, or teriflunomide. While well below the assay cutoff for positivity, the lower C6 index values in these patients raise the possibility that treatment with these agents could have affected the ability of the MS patients to generate an antibody response to Bb. In MS patients with history and symptoms consistent with LD, performing serologic testing prior to initiation of immunomodulatory therapy should be considered.

Although our sample size was small, our study does not suggest that LNB is being missed in MS patients in the Atlantic Canadian province of New Brunswick.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the work of Vett Lloyd at Mount Allison University (MAU) for developing the study concept and design. Dr. Lloyd also performed the MAU lab analysis and provided the control specimens. The authors also acknowledge the work of Kami Harris, who aided in the collection of the MS and control samples for analysis. The clinical work and organization of data by Carly Murray are also acknowledged. This work was supported by Mitacs grant number IT03139.

Disclosures

Dr. Hatchette reports grants from GSK and grants from Pfizer, outside the submitted work; and Lyme-related work as the President of the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada, Provincial co-chair for the Canadian Public Health Laboratory Network Lyme Disease Diagnostic Working Group, and as a member of the Canadian Lyme Disease Research Network. Dr. Webster reports grants from AbbVie, grants from Gilead, and grants from Merck, outside the submitted work; and Lyme-related work with the AMMI Canada Lyme Disease Working Group and the Atlantic Tickborne Disease Network. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Statement of authorship

GM was involved in developing the study concept and design. PC coordinated the study, including the recruitment and enrollment of study participants and acquisition of sera for analysis. LRL oversaw confirmatory Western blot testing and assisted with data analysis and manuscript preparation. TFH provided EIA testing of study and control group sera, analyzed data, and assisted with writing of the manuscript. DW assisted in study planning and logistics, data analysis, and writing of the manuscript. All authors critically reviewed the manuscript and approved the final version.

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Figure 0

Table 1: Description of the Western blot banding patterns associated with positive and equivocal C6 EIA specimens with testing at the clinical and research laboratories